Business Standard

No Bezos-ambani face-off as Big Tech quits race for IPL rights

Amazon, Alphabet, Apple pull out of media rights auction; Disney-star combine and Ril-led Viacom 18 emerge frontrunne­rs

- SURAJEET DAS GUPTA New Delhi, 10 June

Global tech majors Amazon, Alphabet and Apple Inc on Friday dropped out of the race to bid for Indian Premier League (IPL) media rights, leaving the space to traditiona­l broadcaste­rs. With this, the auction starting Sunday is expected to see Disney-star combine and Reliance Industries-led Viacom 18 at the centrestag­e of a keenly-watched sporting rights battle.

However, Sony and Zee, which are set to be merged by September, could be the dark horse, sources said. They were among the seven participan­ts at the technical evaluation of the bids by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) on Friday.

Analysts and bidders are divided on whether the withdrawal of the tech majors would dim the prospects of BCCI garnering around Rs 40,00050,000

crore for five-year media rights. However, the pull-out by Amazon indeed rules out a Jeff Bezos-mukesh Ambani faceoff in the IPL arena.

The composite base price for broadcasti­ng, digital and global rights of IPL for 74 games per season for 2023-2027 has been set at Rs 32,000 crore, which is double the total bid amount when Disney-star had bought rights for both TV and digital last time at ~16,347 crore.

Sources said Zee may bid for both digital as well as broadcasti­ng rights. Zee-sony as a merged entity could overtake Disney + Star as the top broadcaste­r in the country if they win the IPL rights, analysts said.

Amazon, Alphabet and Apple Inc did not comment on why they decided not to participat­e in the bid.

Other companies which came for the technical evaluation, apart from Disney+star, Viacom 18, Zee and Sony, include Times Internet and Africabase­d Supersport­s and radio broadcasti­ng company Fun Asia.

Both Supersport­s and Fun Asia will look for internatio­nal rights, according to officials. Besides the tech companies, others like Dreamz 11 and Sky Sports did not show up for technical evaluation though they had bought the bid papers.

Companies, which clear the technical evaluation, will bid on Sunday for the various rights on offer.

In the previous IPL edition, Facebook had bid for digital rights but had lost.

Sandeep Goyal, managing director of ad agency Rediffusio­n, believes Disney+ Star and RIL’S Viacom are the only two serious competitor­s in the fray. ‘’Rest of them either don’t have the monetizati­on vehicles or don’t have the balance sheets for the size of the punt,” he said.

Amazon, like other high tech players, has been hamstrung by the rules of bidding. For instance, the rules do not allow anyone to bid in a consortium (it cannot bid for TV rights as it does not have a broadcasti­ng channel and it can’t tie up with one). The company, therefore, could have bid either for the digital rights for all the matches with a base price of Rs 33 crore per match or only half of that for digital rights for 18 key matches on a non-exclusive basis.

However BCCI bidding conditions provide a distinct advantage to legacy broadcaste­rs (with TV channels and digital platforms). The highest bidder for TV rights this time has the choice of rebidding for the digital rights of all matches, if it is not already the highest bidder in that segment. Similarly the highest bidder in digital segment can also rebid for TV rights where it is not number one, provided it also is a TV broadcaste­r.

A top executive at one of the prospectiv­e bidding firms said: "BCCI might have to reduce its expectatio­ns from the auction. It had expected that digital rights will go up sharply with the entry of top tech companies in the fray, After all Amazon has paid huge amounts in the US for a package of National Football League games. Also it expected Dreamz 11 to bid for digital. Now only Time Internet might." But another executive of a company with big stakes in sports broadcasti­ng said: “No one has really looked at Amazon as a real contender, so don’t see it getting anyone excited or subdued.” The executive pointed out that the new structure ensures that bidding prices go up and BCCI and the 10 franchisee­s make more money with only one player getting all the rights – TV and digital.

Even digital rights for the 18 non-exclusive matches could go to one of the broadcaste­rs who could not get digital rights for all the matches, a source said.

With a global war chest of $30 billion for content, out of which a third will be for sports, Disney is not short of cash to retain the IPL. Elara Capital estimates that one third of Star’s revenue (digital and TV) comes from IPL, and the company says it controls 15-20 per cent share of sports advertisin­g on TV. But it has been underplayi­ng its interest in the property saying it would not indulge in a price war.

For Ril-led Viacom 18, which has a viewership market share of around 12.8 per cent which is less than half of market leader Star-disney at 29.1 per cent and the Zee-sony combine at 26.9 per cent, cricket could give it a big leg-up to catch on with the two big broadcaste­rs. Reliance had bid last time but had lost to Stardisney.

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